Posts Tagged ‘newcastle’

The new line in the sand

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

There have been a lot of things said by Aurelio Vidmar and his team about Adelaide United’s worrying form slump.

In hindsight most of it has sounded fairly empty and shallow simply because the results have continued to deteriorate.

But maybe this week things have changed, because finally, perhaps, the penny has dropped.

Twelve months ago Adelaide United was top of the A-League, and about to play in the Club World Cup.

Now as anyone can see, the Reds are bottom, a massive 13 points behind league leaders and arch rivals Melbourne Victory.

Reds supporters can only hope this is the jolt the club needs to resurrect a campaign that while disappointing and frustrating, certainly isn’t beyond salvaging.

And without doubt the signs are encouraging….well the verbal signs are that is.

Following the shocking performance in Townsville, Mark Rudan became the first player to speak out in really angry terms about United’s historically low position.

An “embarrassed” Aurelio Vidmar apologised for the team’s form and accepted full responsibility for the fall to the bottom of the table, admitting;

“I’ve made some mistakes.

What I’ve done has been in the best interests of the club and the team and sometimes I get things right and sometimes I don’t.

“Fortunately I still have to make decisions and sometimes they one way and sometimes they work and sometimes they don’t.

“That’s how it is at the moment.

And the hugely popular Cassio, shared his pain but pleaded for the fans to keep the faith, and gave a 100% guarantee the team would turn the season around.

“Everyone knows we have not been good enough.

“We have to keep playing, keep training well like we did this week, and if we do that I tell you 100%, the results will come.

“I ask the fans to keep trusting us because we can turn the season around.

“I give you my word, we have good quality players here.

“What’s happened has happened.

“The season starts now for us against Newcastle.

So how are they going to change things around?

Well for one there will be changes in personnel.

 If the Blue bibs at training today are any guide then Hughes, Leckie, Pantelis and Alemao will not be starting against the Jets, but Reid, Barbiero, Jamieson and Cristiano will be.

Vidmar also hinted at positional changes.

So perhaps Cassio will revert to midfield, well he actually admitted it at the press conference, and Cristiano will lead the line.

 Assuming Leckie doesn’t play that will surely be in partnership with Dodd, even if the captain is better suited to midfield.

It’s hard to imagine Vidmar will revert to his preferred one up front formation when the team so desperately needs to score goals.

And then it’s down simply down to attitude, to not lose a single contest in any part of the pitch.

It’s about staying positive and as Vidmar said “not fracturing.”

Here at least Vidmar wants to lead from the front, suggesting he is not worried about his job security, only the job at hand.

And it would seem, quitting is not on his agenda either.

“When you sign on the dotted line it comes with the territory all these sort of things.

“Every coach and player will go through some tough times and some great times and this is just part of it.

“Mentally it’s hard but as a player I never threw in the towel, and I’m not going to give up.

“I’ve still got a lot of fight left in me, and I know the players still got a lot of fight left in them.

“We’re gonna fight, fight and fight until we get out of this.

As Vidmar also said, this is a like cup final for Adelaide, and as expectations have been raised with the success the team has enjoyed over the past five years, it’s now about how everyone “handles the situation.

Most importantly though, playing the Jets is about one thing, three points.

 And while it’s been encouraging to hear a little more anger and desperation this week, it will mean nothing if Adelaide fails to win.

Chances slipping away

Monday, October 5th, 2009

The season may only be nine games old, and Adelaide United just four points from the league summit but at the moment a sixth place finish may about as high as they can finish.

These kind of predictions usually come back to bite, but based on Aurelio Vidmar’s apparent determination to stick with his favoured 4-5-1/4-3-3 formation it’s hard not to think anything otherwise.

For 70 of the 90 minutes at Hindmarsh Adelaide lacked intensity and guile in the final third.

Lloyd Owusu ran around a lot but received little support from overlapping wide men.

He also appeared to lack real conviction when challenging for the stuff he would consider his bread and butter, the high ball.

Anyway, the result was it became really hard for United to get any traction around the Newcastle goal until that is, Vidmar brought on Cristiano for Pantelis and reverted to a 4-4-2 formation.

Featuring Travis Dodd at the point of a diamond four, Sarkies at its base and Cassio and substitute Matthew Leckie wide left and wide right respectively, it almost instantly revived the Reds.

Within six minutes Cassio’s sublime volley had leveled the scores, and from there the game opened up and either side had chances to secure the three points.

But one-all it stayed, and so United’s sixth home game of the season has come and gone with the points tally from those six games limping to a measly eight.

After the game Aurelio Vidmar said he was puzzled why it took 70 minutes for his team to get going but added the form displayed in the final twenty minutes was “the way we should play and the way we wanted to play.”

So without stating the obvious, then why can’t Adelaide, at least at home play a 4-4-2?

Away from home maybe the counterattacking style more suited to a 4-5-1 might be a better option, but at what was once ‘fortress’ Hindmarsh, surely 4-4-2 is the way to go.

Playing 4-5-1 may have worked well last season but this season that is not the case, because either the personnel have changed and/or other teams have worked out how to combat it.

There’s no doubt Paul Reid is being missed and so too is Fabian Barbiero,  so if it is simply injuries to those two players that have rendered Adelaide impotent then they can’t come back soon enough.

After-all, the league is so tight there is still enough time to turn the season around.

But if the formation is flawed, as in it’s not going to work often enough for Adelaide to discover some potency in front of goals, then changes must be made before the season can’t be salvaged.

At this point Vidmar’s preferred tactical game plan is just not working, principally because some of his players cannot do what is required.

Adam Hughes looks lost, incapable of contributing either offensively or defensively.

And with Alemao, Marrone and Mullen all missing, United is struggling down the right because Fyfe hasn’t got the legs to overlap, cross and then get back into defence.

So whatever Aurelio Vidmar decides needs to be done, he needs to sort it quickly before the players lose too much confidence.

You could argue Lloyd Owusu has already lost a little confidence, and Hughes certainly has.

Whether Vidmar can do something before Friday night’s difficult date with the Glory in Perth remains to be seen.